%0 Journal Article %T Period prevalence of self-reported headache in the general population in Germany from 1995--2005 and 2009: results from annual nationwide population-based cross-sectional surveys %A Andreas Straube %A Bernhard Aicher %A Steffanie F£¿rderreuther %A Thomas Eggert %A Janin K£¿ppel %A Stefan M£¿ller %A Roland Schneider %A Gunther Haag %J The Journal of Headache and Pain %D 2013 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1129-2377-14-11 %X These surveys were conducted as face-to-face paper-and-pencil interviews from 1995 through 2004, and from 2005 onwards as computer-aided personal interviews. The reported headaches were self-diagnosed by the interviewees. Per year, approximately 640 trained interviewers interviewed between 10,898 and 12,538 German-speaking individuals aged 14 and older and living in private households in the whole of Germany (response rate: 67.4% and 73.1%, gross samples: 16,026 to 18,176 subjects). A total of more than 146,000 face-to-face interviews were analyzed.The one-year headache prevalence remained stable over the entry period, with 58.9% (95%CI 57.7--60.1) to 62.5% (95%CI 61.3--63.7) (p=0.07). Women showed consistently higher prevalence rates than men (females: 67.3 (95%CI 65.7--68.9) to 70.7% (95%CI 69.1--72.3), males: 48.4% (95%CI 46.5--50.3) to 54.3% (95%CI 52.4--56.2)), and both sexes showed a bell-shaped age dependence with peaks in the 30--39 age group. A stable slightly higher prevalence was observed in urban versus rural areas (p<0.0001), and there was also a significant trend towards higher prevalence rates in groups with a monthly household income larger than 3,500 [euro sign] (p=0.03).The overall headache prevalence remained stable in Germany in the last 15 years. %U http://www.thejournalofheadacheandpain.com/content/14/1/11/abstract